The Evangelical Executive Advisory Board will convene regularly to “provide advisory support to Mr. Trump on those issues important to Evangelicals” and other faithful, the campaign said in a statement.

It also will lead a Faith and Cultural Advisory Committee.

First on the list is former Congresswoman Michele Bachmann. Shortly before announcing her own bid for the presidency in 2012, Bachmann withdrew from Salem Lutheran Church after 10 years as a member and attended a nearby evangelical church.

The list also includes Johnnie Moore, national spokesman for My Faith Votes, one of the organizers of Tuesday’s largely evangelical meeting, and the Rev. Jerry Falwell Jr., president of Liberty University.

Falwell had hailed Trump in the meeting. “Mr. Trump is a bold and fearless leader who will take the fight to our enemies and to the radical Islamic terrorists.”

Moore said before the meeting that he had seen “a real consolidation of evangelical support” for Trump.

Not all Christians have lined up behind Trump. Here are seven Christian leaders who have made less-than-enthusiastic statements about him.

Russell Moore Perhaps no evangelical leader has been more outspoken in opposition to Trump than the president of the Southern Baptist Convention’s Ethics & Religious Liberty Commission. In a single weekend last month, Moore penned an op-ed in the New York Times and made an appearance on “Face the Nation,” in which he called Trump’s campaign “reality television moral sewage.”

Trump’s retort on Twitter called Moore “a terrible representative of Evangelicals and all of the good they stand for. A nasty guy with no heart!”

Denny Burk A professor of biblical studies at Kentucky’s Boyce College, Burk blogged in March that although Trump has said he would appoint conservative Supreme Court justices, he does not seem to understand the pro-life position. Burk said Trump’s statements supporting torture present a “real threat to our constitutional order.”

Max Lucado In a February blog post titled “Decency for President” that he later expanded into a column, the Oak Hills Church pastor and popular Christian author said Trump wouldn’t pass the “decency interview” he required for his three daughters’ dates.

“I don’t endorse candidates or place bumper stickers on my car,” the San Antonio pastor wrote. “But I am protective of the Christian faith. If a public personality calls on Christ one day and calls someone a ‘bimbo’ the next, is something not awry?”

Thabiti Anyabwile The pastor of Anacostia River Church and council member of The Gospel Coalition has called Trump a racist and many of the positions both he and Hillary Clinton have taken “evil.”

“If this election proves anything, it proves there remains among Christian people a lot of uncritical allegiance to the parties of men and even some idolizing of them,” Anyabwile wrote.

Erick Erickson The conservative blogger behind The Resurgent told Katie Couric last month that “if the Republican Party wants to go in (Trump’s) direction, I guess I’m not a Republican anymore.”

Robbie George A Catholic and McCormick Professor of Jurisprudence at Princeton University, George tweeted this month, “Good people, reject (Clinton) but don’t associate yourself with Trump. He will disgrace & taint all who snuggle up to him.”

Alan Noble In an article in Vox this month, the editor of the website Christ and Pop Culture said evangelicals voting for Trump would undermine “decades of the religious right’s insistence that character matters in politicians” and called Trump “a deceptive, infantile, racist demagogue.”